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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1899-11-16, Page 3SETTLED IN HEIVEN. DIvino interpodition in Keenan Affairs. FATE OF NATIONS IN GOD'S HANDS Dr. Talmage Declares That God Doe, Not Govern the world in a Hap- hazard Danner -Nations Which lb* Wr0141: Surelv Perish. * Washington, Nov. 12,—T13e idea ee--thet things in tide world are at loose ends and going at haphazard is in this discourse combated. by Dr. Talmage. The text is Psalms cmc, 89, "Forever, 0 Lord, thy word is settled in heaven." This world has been in process. of change ever since it was created.— mountains born, mountains dying, and they have both cradle and grave. Once this planet was all fluid, and no being such as you or 1 have ever seen could have lived on it a minute, Our hemisphere turns its face to the sun and then turns its back, The axis of the earth's revolution hae shifted. The earth's center of grave ity is changed, OPCO Idelverti grew In the arctic and there was snow in the trople. There has been a redis- tribution of land and sea, the land crumbling into the sea, the sea swallowing the land. Ice and Ore have fought for the possession of tbis planet, The chemical composition A it is different tiow frem what it once was. Volcanoes once terribly alive are dead, not one throb of 4ery pulse, not one breath af vapor—the ocean changing its amount of saline qualities. The Internal fires of the earth are gradually eating their Waer to the surfaces—upheaval and subsie deuce of vast realms of continent. Moravians in Greenland have re-,. MOVOCI their boat poles because the advancing sea, submerged them. Lin - moue records that in 87 years a great stone was 100 feet nearer the water than when he wrote. Forests have been buried by the sea, and land that Wns cultured by farmer's boo can be touched only by sailor's an- chor, Loch 'level of Scotland and Dingle Bay of Ireland and the fiords of Norway, where pleasure boats now float, were once valleys and glens, Many of the islande of the sea are the tops of sunken mountains. Six thousaud -miles of the Pacific Ocean are sinking. The diameter of the earth, according to scientific an- nouncement, ie 189 miles less than It was. The entire configuration of the earth is altered. Hills are de- nuded of their forests. The frosts and the waters and the air bom- bard the earth till it surrenders to the assattlt. The so-called "overlaste ing hills" do not last. Many rail- road companies cease to build iron bridges because the iron has a life of its own, not a, vegetable life or an amimal life, but a metallic life, ipmd when that dies the bridge goes down. Oxidation of minerals is only another term for describing their death. Mosses and seaweeds help de- stroy the rocks they decorate. The changes of the inanimate earth only symbolize the moral changes. Society ever becomes different for better or worse.. Boundary lines be- tween nations are settled until the next war unsettles them. Uncertainty strikes through laws and customs and legislation. The characteristee of, this world is that nothing in it is settled. At a time when we hoped that the arbitration planned last summer at The Ilaglie, Holland, would forever sheathe the sword and 'spike the gun and dismantle the fortress tbe world has on hand two wars which are digging graves for the !lower of English and American soldiery. From the presence of such geological and social and national and international unrest we turn with thanksgiving- and exultation to my text and End that there are things forever settled, but in higher latitudes than we have ever trod. "Forever, 0 Lord, thy word is set- tled in heaven." " High up in the palace of the sun at least five things are settled—that nations which go continuously and persistently wrong perish; that hap- piness is the result of spiritual con- dition and not of earthly environ- ment; that this world is a school- house for splendid or disgraceful graduation; that with or without us the world is to be made over into a acei0 of arborescence and purity; tha rall who are adjoined to the un- patil eled One of Bethlehem and 1+Tazareth and Golgotha will be the itubjects of a supernal felicity with- out any taking off. Do you doubt ray first proposition —that nations which go wrong per- leh? We have in this American na- tion all the eiemennets of permanence and destruct..on. We need not bor- row from others any trowels for up - building or torches for demolition. Elements of ruin—nihilism, inndelity, agnosticism, Sabbath desecration, in- ebrity, sensuality, extravagance, fraud; they are all here. Elements of safety—God worshiping men and women by the scores of millions, ajtanesty, benevolenee, truthfulness, reel' sacrifice, industry, sobriety and more religion than has characterized any nation that has ever existed; they are all here. The only question Is as to which of the forces will gain dominancy—the one class ascendant, and this United States Govermaaent, I think, will continue as long as the world exists; the other class ascend- ant, and the United States goes into such small pieces that other govern- ments would hardly think . them worth picking tqL Walk on in the cemetery of nations and see the long lines of tombs— Thebe' and Tyre and Egypt and Babylon and Mello -Persian and Mace- donian . and Boman and Saxon heat- archy, great nations, small nations that lived 500 years. Our own nation will be judged by the same moral lavrs by which all other nations have boen judged. The judgment day for individuals will probably come far on in the future. ,Tudgmen t day for nations is every day, every day weighed, every day approved or every day condemned. , Never before in the history of thie eoun try has the American =aloe been znore surely in the balances than it is this minute. Do right, and we go up. Do wrong, and we go down. Another thing decided in the seine high place is that happiness is the result of spiritual condition Anil not of earthly environment. If -we who may sometimes have a, thousand don - 'ars to invest find it such a perolee. ity to know whea to clo with it and soon after find that we invested it where principal and interest have gone down through roguery or panie what must be the worriment of these having millions to invest and whose losses correspond in inagnitude their resources! People who have their three or four dollars a day wages are just as happy as those who have an income of $*00,000 a year, Sometimes happiness is seated, on a footstool and sometimes misery on a throne. All the gold of earth in one chunk cannot purchase five Minutes of complete satisfaction. Worldly success is an atmosphere that breeds the maggots of envy anci jealousy and hate. There are those who will never forgive you if you have more emoluments or honor or efts° than they baver. 1/70 take you down is the dominant wish of most of those who are not as high as you are, They will spend hours and days find tears to entrap you. They will leaver arotind wspape Qliices to get QUO mean line printed depreciat• Mg you. 'Your heaven is their hell. A dying president of the 'United States said many years ago in rea gctrd to his lifetime Of experience, "It doesn't pay." The leading Stateameri ef America in letters of advice warn young men to keep out of politics. Many of the =St sue- eessful have tried in vain to &Own their trouble in strong drink. On the other hand. there aro millions of people who oa departing this We will have nothing to leave but a good name and a life insurance ',vitas° illumined faces are indices ot illumined souls, They wish every- body well. When the fire hell rings, they do not go to the window at midnight to see if it is their store that it on fire, for they never owned a store, arid when the *Winkler equinox is abroad they do not worry lest their ships founder in a gale. foe they never owned a shilk. and when the nominations are made for hi ert political office'they are not fear- ful that their name will be over. looked, for they never applied ins ()Mee. There is so much heartiness and freedom, from care in their laughter that when you hear it you are compelled to laugh in sympathy, although you know not what they are laughing about: Winn the children of that family ressamble in the silting^ room of the old homestead to hear the father's w ill read, they. are not, fearful of be- ing cut off with a millioa and a half dollars, for the old man never owned anything more than the farm of seventy -live acres, which yielded only enough plainly to support the household. They have More happiness in one month than many have in a whole lifetime. Would to God I had the capacity to explain to you on how little a man can be happy and on how much he may be wretched! Get your heart right and all is right. Keep your heart wrong, and all is wrong, That is a principle settled in heaven. Some have wondered why gradua- tion day in college is called "com- mencement day" when it is the last day of college exercises, but gratlena tion days are properly called com- mencement day. To all the gradu- ated it is the commencement of act- ive life, and our graduation day from earth will be to us commencement of our chief life, our larger the, our more tremendous life, our eternal life. But what a day commencement day on earth is The student never sees any day like it. At any rate, I never did. Old Niblo's Theatre in New Y ork comes back to ma The gowned and tassel hatted professors behind us, and our kindred and friends before and above us, and the air redolent with gtueancis to be thrown to us. What a commence- ment day it was for all of us about to graduate! But mightier day will it be when we graduate from this world. Will it be hisses of condem- nation or handcIapping of approval? Will there be flung to us nettles or wreaths? Will it be a resounding "Come!'' or a reverberating "-De- part?" Another thing decided in the high places of the universe is that this world, with or without us, will be made over into a scene of abores- cence and purity. Do not think that such a consummation depends upan our personal fidelity. It will be done any/aow. God's cause does not go a -begging. If all the soldiers of Jesus Christ now living should be- come deserters and go over to the enemy, that would not defeat the cause. A large part of the Bible is taken up with Jelling us what the world will be. There is a large army, human and angelic, now in the field, but God's reserve forces are more numerous and more mighty than those now at the front, and if he could in Gideon's time rout the Mitliannes with a crash of crockery, and if he could in Sharngar's tone overcome a host with an ox goad, and if in Samson's time be could de- feat an army with a bleached jaw- bone, and if the .walls of Jericho went down under a blast of perfor- ated ram's horn, and if in Christ's day blind oyes were cured by oint- ment of spittle, then God can do anything he ,says he will do. As yet he has taken only one sword out of a whole arraory of weapons. Do not get nervous, as if the Lord were go- ing to be defeated. Oh, that coming day of the world's perfection The earth will be so clanged that the serraonology will be changed. There will be no raore calls to repentance, for all will have repented; no more gathering of alms for the poor, for the poor will have • been enriched; no hospital Sunday, for disjoiinted bones will have been set and the wounds all healed, and the incurable diseases of other times will have been overcome , by a meter - la medica and a pharmacy and a den- tistry and a therapeutics that have conquered everything that afflicted nerve or lung or tooth or eye or liniti--lisalthologei complete and uni- versal. The poultice and the oint- ment and the panacea and the catho- licoa and the surgeon's knife and the dentist's forceps and the scientist's X ray will have fulfilled their mis- sion. The social life of the world will be perfected. In that millennial ag-o I imagine ourselves standing in ;runt of a house lighted for levee We enter among groups filled with gladness and talltiog good sense and -elle ing each other in pleasantries and in every possiblc way forward, ing good neighborhood: no looking askance, no whispered beekbitinns, no strut of pretension, no oblivion of some one's presence beeause Yon do not want to know him; each one happy, determined on making some one else happy; words of honest op. preciation instead of hollow illinteeye sauvities and genielities instead of inflations and poinposities; equipage and upholstery and sculpture and painting paid for; two hours of men, tal and moral improvement; all the guests able to walk as steaclila; down the steps of that mansion as when they ascended them; no awak- ing next moening with aching head and bloodshot eye and incompetent for the day's duties; the social We as perfect. as refinement and common sense and culture and prosperity and religion can Illake it; the earth made better than it was at the start, and all through gospelleing influetices# dkr rectly or inclireetly. Another thing decided in that high place is that all who are adjoined to the unparalleled One of Rethleheen and Nazareth and Golgotha will be the subjects of a superwtl felicity Without any taking off, The Old adage says that "beggars must not be choosers," and the human reee in its depleted state bad better net be critical of the mode by which God would empaittee all of us. I could easity think of It plan more oomph.* mentary to our fallen humanity than that which is called the "plea of sat. va.tion." If God had allowed US to do part Of the work of recovery and he do the rest, if we could do three. querters of it and he do the last quarter, if we could accomplish mot Of it anti be just put on the finishing towhee, many could look with more complacency upon the projected rein- statement of the human fautily,, No, no! We must have our pride sub- jugated, our stubborn Will made flex- ible and a, supernatural power de- monstrated in us at every step. A pretty plan of salvation that would be, of human drafting and manufact- uring! It would be a doxology sung to ourselves. God must have all the glory, mit one step of our heavenly throne made by earthly ear- PentrY; not one string could we twist of the harp of our eternal re- joicing. Accept all as an unmerited donation from the skies, or we will never have it at all. "Now," says stone one, "if Christ Is the only way what about the heathen, who have never heard of him?" But you are not heathen, and why divert us from the question of our personal salvation? Satan is al- ways introducing something irrele- vant. Ile wants to take it out of a personality into an abstraction. Get our own salvation settled, and then we will discuss the salvation of other people. "But," says some one, "what percentage of the human race will be saved? What will be the com- parative number saved and lost?" There satan thrusts in the mathema- tics of redemption. lie suggests that you find out the mathematical pro- portion of the redeemed. But bo not deceived. I am now discussing the eternal welfare of only two persons, VOlirself and myself. Get ourselves right before we bother about getting others right. 0 Christ, cern() hither and master our case! Here are our sins—pardon them; our wounds— heal them; our burdens—lift them; our sorrows—comfort them. We want the Chriat of Bartimeus to open our blind eyes, the Christ of Martha to help us in our domestic cares, the Christ of Olivet to help us preach our sermons, the Christ of Lake Gali- lee to still our tempests, the Christ of Lazarus to raise our dead. Not too tired is he to come, though he has on his whipped shoulders so long carried the world's woe and on his lacerated feet walked this way to ac- cept our salutation. By the bloody throes of the moun- tain on which Jesus died, and by the sepulcher where his mutiliated body was inclosed in darkened crypt and by the Olivet from which he arose, while astonished disciples clutched for his robes to detain him in their companionship, and by the radiant and omnipotent throne on which he sits waiting for the coming of all those whose redemption was settled In heaven, I implore you bow your head in immediate and final sub- mission. Once exercise sorrow for What you have done and exercise trust in him for what he is willing to do, and all is well for both worlds. Then you can swing out de- fiance to all opposition, human and diabolic. In conquering his foes he conquered yours. And have you no- ticed that passage in Colossians that represent him ''having despoiled prin- cipalities and powers, he made a show of them, openly triumphing," so bringing before' us that over- whelming spectacle of a Roman triumph? But, oh, the difference in those triumphs! The Roman triumph represented arrogance, cruelty,. op- pression and wrong, but Christ's triumph meant emancipation and holiness and joy. The former was a procession of groans accompanied by a clank of chains, the other a proces- sion of hosannas by millions set for- ever free. The only shackled ones of Christ's triumph will be satan and his cohorts tied to our Lord's' char- iot wheel, with all the abominations of all the earth bound for an eternal captivity. Then will come a feast ha which the chalices will he filled "with the new wine of the kingdom." Under arches *cononemorative of all the battles in which the bannered armies of the church railitant through thousands of years of strug- gle have at last won the day Jesus will ride. Conqueror of earth and hell and heaven. Those armies, dis- banded, will take palaces and thrones. "And they shall come from the east and the west and the north and the south and sit down in this kingdom of God." And may you and /, through the pardoning and sancti- fying grace of Christ, be guests at - that royal banquet! TIM HousEKEEpER IrTg-L 271131) RECLPF.$. Petite these recipes in a rerap book eatei week, under proper heading's, and in a few months yea will haw s, moo complete Melt Book. Preksing For an eight or ten pound turkey. out the brown crust frorn slices at pieces of stale bread until you. have .rauch as alb inside of a, pound loaf; put it into a suitable dish and poeu tepid water foot warm, for thal makes it heavy) over it; let it stane for one uthmte, as it soaks Very quick - /T. Now take up a handful at a time and :squeeze it hard and dry witl. both hands, placing it as you g; along, in another dish; this Proi'es makes it very right. When all I. pressed dry, toss it :all up lightla through your Angers; now add pepper salt—about a teaspoonful—also a tea epoonful of powdered summer savory the same amount of sage, or the gree' heel) minced fine; add half a eup o melted hatter,and a beaten egg Work thoroughly all together, and i is ready for dressing either fowls, feel or meats. A. lit tie ehopped sausage it turkey dressing is considered by sour, en improvement, when well ineoreor- ated with the other ingredients. ro; peas and docile the stuffing may bt .inade the fame PS for turkey, will the Additioll Of a few slices of .onioa chapped dee. Baked from turd. Beat five fresh eggs, the whites sind yokes eeparately, the yokes with halt CU of sem, the whites to A etiff froth; then stir them gradually into a quart a sweet, riclt uiiU previeusly boiled and cooled; flavor with extract of Imuou or vauilla and addhalf a tea- spoouful of salt, Rub butter over the bottom awl sides of a, baking diets or tin basist; pour in the custard, grate a little ontmeg over and bake in a quick oven. It is better to set the dish in a shallow pan of hot water reach- ing nearly to the tap, the water to he kept boiling until the custard is baked; three quarters of an hour is generally enough. Run s, teaspoon handle into the middle of it, if it comes oat clean it is baked sumci- entiy. Chicken rote -rely. One quart of flour, two teaspoonfuls of cream tartar mixeii with the flour, ono teaspoonful of soda dissolved in a teacupful of mak; a teaspoonful of salt; do not -ase shortening of any kixid, but roll out the mixture half an inch thick, and on it lay minced chicken, veal or mutton. The meat must be seasoned with pepper and salt and. be free from gristle. Roll the crust over and over, and put it on a buttered plate and place it in a steam- er for half an hour. Serve for break- fast or lunch, giving a slice to each person with the gravy served with it, Vera Loaf, Three ponnds of raw 'cal chopped very fine, butter the size of an egg, three eggs, three tablespoonsful cream or milk; if milk use a small piece of butter; mix the egg and cream to- gether; mix with the veal four pound- ed crackers, one teaspoonful of black pepper, one large tablespoonful of salt, one large tablespoonful of sage; mix well together and form into a loaf. Bake two and one-half hours, basting with btttter and water while baking, Serve cut in thin slices. To Remove Stains from Marble. Mix together one-lialf pound of soda, one-half pound. of soft soap and. one pound of whiting. Boil them until they become as thick as paste, and let it cool. Before it is quite cold, spread it over the surface of the marble and leave it at least a whole day. Use soft water to wash it off, and rnb it well with a soft cloth. For black marble nothing is better than spirits of turpentine. To Roast Reef Heart. Wash it carefully and open it suffici- ently to remove the ventricles, then soak it in cold water until the *blood Is discharged; wipe it dry and stuff it nicely with dressing, as for turkey; roast it about an hour and a half. Serve it with the gravy, which should be thickened with some of the stuffing. It is very nice hashed. Seive with currant jelly. Cure for Ringworms. Spirits of turpentine, three draohms ;, camphorated oil, nine drachms. Mix for a liniment. For an adult four drachms of the former and eight of the latter xnay be used. If the child be young, or if the skin is very ten- der, the camphorated oil may be used without the turpentipe. To Prevent Rust on Flat -Irons. Beeswax and salt will make your rusty fiat -irons as smooth and as clean as glass. Tie a ltunp of wax in a rag and. keep it for that purpose. When the irons are hot, rub them first with the wax rag, then scour with a paper or cloth sprinkled with salt. To Preserve Itibboup and Silks. Ribbons and silks should be put away for preservation in brown paper; the chloride of lime in white paper discolors them. A white satin dress should be pinned up in blue paper with brown paper outside sewn to- gether at the edges. To Soften Rents and Shoe. Kerosene will soften boots and shoes which have been hardened by water, and render them as pliable as new. auireeie comity/1' X'r0S9erilig”:. l3uilding operations in Dufferin County for the season of 1899 are, says The Shelburne Economist, a fair index to the prosperity of our people. Builders in all lines have been kept unusually busy throughout the season, and a great deal of work has yet to be done, In the western portion of the county we baxe evidence of the "growing time" eu every Laud, in the way of new houses, barns and a rapid clearing up of land, which a, few years ago was forest and swamp. Other evidences of the prosperity of Defferin County farmers are found in the general effort to reduce farm mertgogee, That sueh reductions are taking place to a greater extent than for many years is a fact within the knowledge of the writer. Farmers have bad good crops, they have had. ready cash markets for everything they have to sell, awl the reduced rates of interest will enable those ow- ing money on mortgages torealte geu- eroes repayments of principal. Only &tSender' Risk. The Postmaster General has received eaeSces from the Imperial Post Office gathorities to the effect that they can at present only secure at far AS Cape Town the transmissien of percels sd- desseA to the 'South African. Repub.'. lie, the Orange Free State and ether disturbed Inert; of South Africa. There is no objeCtion, however,. t fOrwarding parcel* at the risk .of the fiendere and in .the case (if auy sech parcels reaching London from the Coloniee, it will Lb, assumed that the wider& wish them scut at their CaWit LUCKY LUCKNOWT. Ontario Town Which Considers Itself Fortunate in Having Dodd's Xidney Fills on Hand. Sloe. Dodd's Widney ruts Wore Intro. dueled Little le Heard of the Old Complittot—nackaebe—Mr.Goe. iturgese Explains Ina ease. Luokuow, Nov. 0 —The people of this town are of the opinion that they aro the most fortunate lot of people in the country. They say they Imee discovered a remarkably easy escape from Backache -4h° euemy of all peo- ples at all timee. They say that Backache is really Kidney ache' and that Dodd's Kidney Pills willcure it. The people of Lacknow may be right, and indeed they are right, to a certain extent. But they are laboring under a snistaken impression if they imagine they box° made a new dis- covery in finding, Dodd's Kidney Pills will cure Backache. It is a evell-lonvon fact itt all coun- tries that Dodd's Kidney Pills are a specific not only for Backache, but for all farms of Kiduey Disease—I3right's Disease, Diabetes, Blieuraatism, Heart Disease, Bladder and Urinary Complaints, Women's Disorders, and Blood Impurities. The people of Lacknow are not the less fortunate, however, in having a medicine that will cure these diseases, even though cures are not confined to their own town. Dodd's Kidney Pills comprise the only medicine that will cure them, and there was a time when the more severe of the maladies were incurable. Mr. George Burgess, of Lucknovr, says: "I have beeu sick for about five months. I had a terrible baclr- ache all the time, and my kidneys were very bad as the doctor said. I was advised to use Dodd's Kidney Pills. I got one box and found relief almost immediately. I used three boxes altogether and am recovered completely. I can do my work better now than ever in my life before." J11411 n MeCarthyl; Ryes. Justin McCarthy, the historian and novelist, has just undergone the last of a series of operations for the relief of his eyes, and it is expected that his sight will be completely restored.„ Holloway's Corn Cure is a specific for the removal of corns and warts. We have never beard. of its failing to remove even the worst kind. Formidable Army Pistol. The new manser pistol, used by the German cavalry, is a very formidable weapon. It will kill up to a distance of 500 yards. Sahara Desert is Really Groat. The Sahara desert is three times as large as the Mediterranean. Pale sickly childrou should. ase Mother Grave's l'irorm Exterminator Worms are one of the principal causes of suffering in children and should be expelled from the system. MISERABLE WOMEN. HOW WO3IEN LOSE INTEREST IN THEM HOUSEHOLD, The Ble to Which Wooten are Heir Canse 3fuela Suffering -The Experi- ence, or a Lady Wlto Has Found Speedy Cure. • :WS. TWO T. Comeau, who resides at 83g Arago Street, St, Roch, Que- bec, is a teacher of French, English and music. For many years NTS. Comeau has suffered greatly from in- ternal troubles, peculiar to her sex, and also from continuous wealmeas the result of headaches, neuralgia and nervous prostration. Her trouble be- came so bad that site was forced to give up teaching and go to an hos- pital, but the treatment there did not materially benefit her and ultimately she left the hospital still a great sufferer. Nieautime her husband hays lug heard of the great value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People purchased a. few boxes wad prevailed. upon his wife to try them. -When ita- tervieweil as to the merits of the pills Mrs. Comeau gave her story to the re- porter about as follows; -My trouble came on after Use birth of my child, and up to the time 1 be- gets te use Dr. Williams' Pluir Pflls I could find nothing to core me. suffered mach molly, was very weak, Ilea frequent severe headaches, and little or Po armetite. It was not long after I began the Imo of the pills that I found they were helping me very ulna. awl after taking them for e couple ef mouths; 1 Was as well as ever I had beeu. My appetite im- proved, the pains left me, and I gains ed considerably in flesh and am again able to attend to the leeSOUS et ray pupils and superintend my household work. Since using the pills rayself I have reccauntenled them to other* and have heard nothing but praiseitt heir favor wherever used." No (list:every of modern times has proved such a boon to WOIllen as Dr. Williams' Pink Pils for Pale People. Acting directly ea the blood and nerves, invigorating the body, regta ing the functions they restore health and strength to exhansted women, and make them feel that life itt gain worth living. Sold by all dealers ia inedicne or sent post pied at ;We a box or sixboxes or Osa.50, by addressing the Dr. Wil - Hams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, Refuse all substitutes. en Rrantion Sing* 2728. The most active voleano its the world is Mt, Saugay, 17,190 feet, sines ated on the eastern chein, of the An. des, South Ameriea, It has been ia constant eruption since 1728. $100 Reward $100. The readers of this roper will be pleased ti learn that tbere is at least One dreaded ulnass thatacience has been able to eure in all its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hairs Geterrb Cure Is the only pAsitive eure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh beim; a c mstItutional dis- ease, requires a eamaltuoonal treatment, Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken int ornally. aetl ng direct. - 1. upon the blood and mucous sure:tees of the system, thereby destroyli g this foundation of tho disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting, na- ture in doing its work. The proprietors -toms se much faith in its curative powers, that they offer One Hundred D ,liars for any caso that it falls to cure. Seed f.ir list 4 d' testimonials. Address. F. J. CHENEY ec CO., Toledo, O. NrSold by Druggists, 7.5e. Ant!-Vivisectlon memettion. The opponents of vivisection have arranged for a special exhibit of in- struments of torture during the Paris exposition. A dose of Miller's Worm Powders occasionally will keep the children healthy. Sotti "Native. "Has Eugene Dobbins always mov- ed in the first circles?" "I heve my doubts; he walks on a hardwood fioor as if he was afraid of it." In Nature's Storehouse There are Cures. —Medical experiments _lave shown eon- clusia,ely that there are madicinal virtues in eveu ordinary plant i growing up around us vrhich give them a value that cannot be estimated. It is held by some that Nature provides a cure for every dis- ease which neglect and ignorance have visited. upon man. However, this may be, it is well known that Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, distilled from roots and herbs, are a sovereign remedy in curing all disorders of the digestion. Au Island of Lakes. Nearly one-third of the surface of Newfoundland is covered with fresh water, mostly ill the form of lakes. Health for the children. Miller's Worm Powders. Long nay. At Ward.bury, Norway, the longest day lasts from May 11 to July 22 without interruption. A new back for 50 cents. Kidney Pills and Plaster. Miller's 46.4htin4iiji 4.444.40,441. fa -4.k 4,14r4t, 4.4" derAmiA -teak, iA "id Ace/ 44L4/ e14.0 ,k1Z ad.evat, epe, eAc A6